I've already indicated how it can be done. Put the glue in an old plastic glue bottle, the type with a spout. Put in a few marbles. That will help submerge the bottle and retain the heat once it's removed from the water bath.
Line the timbers up, next to each other. Pre warm them. If you really need more open time have a couple of infar red heat lamps hovering above them. Remove the bottle from the water bath and run two or three heavy beads down the length of each timber. You don't even need to squeeze the bottle, the Hide glue should run by itself. It's much quicker than applying PVA. Absolutely no need to spread or brush the glue. Lay each piece of timber on top of each other. Let the weight or the clamping spread the glue. The rest is just a matter of having the clamps at the ready and at the right opening distance. Packing pieces/cauls can be pre tack glued on to the timbers. No need to fiddle around for those. It can be all done very quickly and efficiently. It's exactly the same method that I used to glue up 24 strips of 0.6 mm veneer. Even though they were only 1 cm x 8 cm's, 24 strips glued in one single operation is an involved glue up. Not only that but I repeated the exercise 20 times. Not once did the glue gel. Standard veneer is so thin that it doesn't retain any heat, hence the need for the heat lamps. Thicker timbers will retain the heat much better.
Line the timbers up, next to each other. Pre warm them. If you really need more open time have a couple of infar red heat lamps hovering above them. Remove the bottle from the water bath and run two or three heavy beads down the length of each timber. You don't even need to squeeze the bottle, the Hide glue should run by itself. It's much quicker than applying PVA. Absolutely no need to spread or brush the glue. Lay each piece of timber on top of each other. Let the weight or the clamping spread the glue. The rest is just a matter of having the clamps at the ready and at the right opening distance. Packing pieces/cauls can be pre tack glued on to the timbers. No need to fiddle around for those. It can be all done very quickly and efficiently. It's exactly the same method that I used to glue up 24 strips of 0.6 mm veneer. Even though they were only 1 cm x 8 cm's, 24 strips glued in one single operation is an involved glue up. Not only that but I repeated the exercise 20 times. Not once did the glue gel. Standard veneer is so thin that it doesn't retain any heat, hence the need for the heat lamps. Thicker timbers will retain the heat much better.